PROFILE
Jessica Dorizac’s many-layered paper pieces and the patterns they won’t give away
“My experimentation with shapes and forms has become more intense and layered, reflective of the environment and probably my own mental scape,” the artist says of her geometric works that resist pattern-finding
Interview by by SEPTEMBER GRACE MAHINO Photos by JOSEPH PASCUAL
Interview by by SEPTEMBER GRACE MAHINO
Photos by JOSEPH PASCUAL
Artist Jessica Dorizac was preparing for her return to Brisbane, Australia when we caught up with her for this feature. She hasn’t been home in four years. As she packs for another country, one would hardly suspect the move is happening. For one, she has two ongoing shows: a group show at Project Space Pilipinas, a gallery in Lucban, Quezon run by artist Leslie de Chavez, and a solo show at the cafe/exhibition space in Escolta called The Den. Much like her husband and artist in-laws, Dorizac’s work explores the possibilities of material art, particularly wood in its various forms; raw wood, plywood, wood shavings, along with construction paper, cardboard, and corrugated board.
In both spaces, Dorizac’s works command attention through a cacophony of colors, shapes, and textures; collages, if you may call them, that defy the basic human instinct to seek patterns in the unfamiliar.
Assemblage is not foreign to the artist, who, prior to returning to Australia to finish her degree in fine arts, resided in Los Baños, Laguna. There at the Fruit Juice Factory, with her husband, artist Miguel Aquilizan, her artist in-laws Isabel and Alfredo Aquilizan, and eight dogs, she toyed with the possibilities of materials in art. It is, after all, a family signature, from Isabel and Alfredo’s wings of sickles to Miguel’s wood and metal sculptures, and to Dorizac’s own colorful layers of cutout paper pieces.
In this interview, we talked to the artist after she touched down in the Land Down Under, where she says she’s experiencing a kind of culture shock coming back. She jokes that her Australian accent is gone and that she’s now full Pinay. When asked about plans to return to Laguna, Dorizac says she’ll go back and forth between her two homes. In both spaces, Dorizac’s works command attention through a cacophony of colors, shapes, and textures; collages, if you may call them, that defy the basic human instinct to seek patterns in the unfamiliar.
Assemblage is not foreign to the artist, who, prior to returning to Australia to finish her degree in fine arts, resided in Los Baños, Laguna. There at the Fruit Juice Factory, with her husband, artist Miguel Aquilizan, her artist in-laws Isabel and Alfredo Aquilizan, and eight dogs, she toyed with the possibilities of materials in art. It is, after all, a family signature, from Isabel and Alfredo’s wings of sickles to Miguel’s wood and metal sculptures, and to Dorizac’s own colorful layers of cutout paper pieces.
In this interview, we talked to the artist after she touched down in the Land Down Under, where she says she’s experiencing a kind of culture shock coming back. She jokes that her Australian accent is gone and that she’s now full Pinay. When asked about plans to return to Laguna, Dorizac says she’ll go back and forth between her two homes.
This interview was edited for clarity and brevity.“My experimentation with shapes and forms has become more intense and layered, reflective of the environment and probably my own mental scape, as one turns inwards during isolated periods.”
Dorizac was born in Brisbane, Australia but hasn’t been there in four years. Her body of work is informed by historical and urban decorative patterns and ornaments, especially those found in the architecture in the Philippines.
You were born in Brisbane, Australia, and until recently were based in Los Baños, Laguna. Could you share your journey from Australia to the Philippines? When and under what circumstances did you make your move?
Born and raised in the sunshine state of Australia. Deep in suburbia, amongst the landscape of Queenslander houses and the unique flora and fauna of Australia. My parents are both migrants, my mother from the Philippines and my father from New Zealand (Aotearoa).
Love was the circumstance under which I made the move to the Philippines. I met my husband Miguel in 2015, we wed in 2016, and decided Philippines would be the place where we would begin to build our lives together, working alongside each other. With the support of Miguel’s parents, we were able to make the move in 2018 and have been there since. It’s been a wonderful but challenging journey, learning about contemporary Philippine culture and society, and deepening the relationship with my Pinoy side.
The world is now into its third year of living in a pandemic. Have you noticed a clear demarcation in your creative/artistic process between the “before” and “after” relative to the pandemic? In particular, has the pandemic affected your view of productivity as an artist?
The pandemic marked the end of an era. It gave the opportunity to focus deeply on practice without the distractions of the outside world, which is ironic considering the situation.
My work before and after the pandemic is evidently different through exploration of wood in its various forms; raw wood, plywood, wood shavings, construction paper, cardboard, corrugated board. My experimentation with shapes and forms has become more intense and layered, reflective of the environment and probably my own mental scape, as one turns inwards during isolated periods.
Dorizac was born in Brisbane, Australia but hasn’t been there in four years. Her body of work is informed by historical and urban decorative patterns and ornaments, especially those found in the architecture in the Philippines.
You were born in Brisbane, Australia, and until recently were based in Los Baños, Laguna. Could you share your journey from Australia to the Philippines? When and under what circumstances did you make your move?
Born and raised in the sunshine state of Australia. Deep in suburbia, amongst the landscape of Queenslander houses and the unique flora and fauna of Australia. My parents are both migrants, my mother from the Philippines and my father from New Zealand (Aotearoa).
Love was the circumstance under which I made the move to the Philippines. I met my husband Miguel in 2015, we wed in 2016, and decided Philippines would be the place where we would begin to build our lives together, working alongside each other. With the support of Miguel’s parents, we were able to make the move in 2018 and have been there since. It’s been a wonderful but challenging journey, learning about contemporary Philippine culture and society, and deepening the relationship with my Pinoy side.
The world is now into its third year of living in a pandemic. Have you noticed a clear demarcation in your creative/artistic process between the “before” and “after” relative to the pandemic? In particular, has the pandemic affected your view of productivity as an artist?
The pandemic marked the end of an era. It gave the opportunity to focus deeply on practice without the distractions of the outside world, which is ironic considering the situation.
My work before and after the pandemic is evidently different through exploration of wood in its various forms; raw wood, plywood, wood shavings, construction paper, cardboard, corrugated board. My experimentation with shapes and forms has become more intense and layered, reflective of the environment and probably my own mental scape, as one turns inwards during isolated periods.
“I don’t work from a singular idea; I work from a continuation in practice.”
“Decorative Disposition” is a group show at Project Space Pilipinas, a gallery in Lucban, Quezon run by artist Leslie de Chavez
Your current show at Project Space Pilipinas is part of the art initiative/platform’s celebration of Women’s Month. Could you share the idea behind “Decorative Disposition”? How long did it take for you to create all the pieces that became part of the exhibit?
The works shown in “Decorative Disposition” were made from 2018 through to 2022. They are the totality of my time spent here in the Philippines. Project Space Pilipinas does the necessary work to bring art to the people. Nestled in the small town of Lucban, PSP prides itself on bringing high-quality exhibitions, without the showbiz, to the citizens. Their program for 2022 is dedicated to female artists, cultural workers, and arts professionals. I am very grateful to have been invited to share my work with the support of PSP.
Your art is also on show at The Den. Can you describe as well the idea behind “Assorted Ornaments”?
The title “Assorted Ornaments” is a poke at artworks being purely ornamental.
I don’t work from a singular idea; I work from a continuation in practice. But the choice of words for the title is a [pondering] on artworks purely consumed as ornamental wall pieces. And I do think about that a lot, especially because of the deep relationship the art community has with the art market. “Decorative Disposition” is a group show at Project Space Pilipinas, a gallery in Lucban, Quezon run by artist Leslie de Chavez.
“Patterns and shapes are universal and it’s interesting to see their application over the documented human history, and more interesting to see them in an unexpected arrangement that makes space for new conversations.”
“Evening in Floor Plans”
Paper, wooden frame
68cm x 61cm
2022
On display at The Den in Escolta for “Assorted Ornaments” until April 12 and online at thedenmanila.com“Evening in Floor Plans” | Paper, wooden frame | 68cm x 61cm | 2022
On display at The Den in Escolta for “Assorted Ornaments” until April 12 and online at thedenmanila.comWhat attracts you to using collage and assemblage to express your ideas? Has this been a medium that you’ve always used and been interested in or have there been others that you’ve explored before? In any case, what does the use of this media draw out from you?
I gravitate to collage and assemblage because I enjoy the meditative process of it. The collecting, deconstructing, and organizing.
Your exhibit notes for “Assorted Ornaments” cite your current fascination with historical and urban decorative patterns and ornaments in architecture. Patterns are usually deceptively simplistic regardless of their level of intricacy, meaning they were designed to evoke a sense of reliability and even safety in their predictability. Speaking as someone viewing your pieces, your art, however, bucks that sense of predictability with the layered elements that disrupt the order of the previously set motifs and set off another pattern (though less immediately discernible) on their own. Is that an intentional decision on your part?
It’s both subconscious and conscious; the decisions of the layered elements that disrupt the order of one layer to begin the next. The nature of how I approach my work is quite painterly, many-layered. “I gravitate to collage and assemblage because I enjoy the meditative process of it. The collecting, deconstructing, and organizing,” the artist says.
Given the very human tendency to look for patterns, what do you enjoy (if any) about jolting the audience out of their complacency, at least in the visual sense?
Patterns and shapes are universal and it’s interesting to see their application over the documented human history, and more interesting to see them in an unexpected arrangement that makes space for new conversations.
I am drawn particularly to accidental, painterly compositions found in my immediate environment where various patterns, motifs, colors, textures, and lines are found amongst each other. There is a lot of this play found in the process of interior decoration, too.
As a woman in the arts, how does your womanhood help define or inform your art? And what challenges do you still see women artists face despite their tremendous contribution to the art world, not just in terms of creative output and ideas but also invisible/emotional labor?
I experience life through the lens of being a woman. As I’ve grown into an adult and seen, read, and listened to other women, and their herstory. I’ve realized the first step to protect, defend, and support women is to be active and aware of the many varied challenges that we women face in everyday life, politically, socially, emotionally, spiritually, and professionally. That in itself is invisible labor that we are doing and [I] hope everyone can join us in listening to these conversations.
What can we look forward to from you after your two current exhibits?
I have two upcoming exhibits, one is on April 9 for the Libris Awards: The Australian Artists’ Book Prize exhibition at Artspace Mackay here in Australia. The other will be on April 23 in the Philippines. It’s called “Pilgrimage”, a duo show with Miguel at Modeka in Makati. ●> Part II of III of Nolisoli.ph’s Women’s Month SpecialFor Women’s Month 2022, we interviewed three artists whose works explore the intersection and possibilities of gender and creativity: Marita Ganse on the artistic value of “women’s work;” Jessica Dorizac on juxtaposing forms, layering meaning; and Shireen Seno on mapping the self through filmmaking.
Interview by September Grace Mahino
Cover photography by Joseph Pascual
Creative direction by Nimu Muallam
Art direction by Levenspeil Sangalang
PROFILE
Marita Ganse’s art quilts are all about memories
The model talks about the art of quilting, her time as a furrier, and finding joy in a slow process
Words by TONI POTENCIANO Photos by JOSEPH PASCUAL
In 2018, model Marita Fe Ganse asked her collaborators at Eairth, a local clothing brand, if she could use their retaso to turn into quilts.
Depending on the size of the quilt, it takes Ganse anywhere between two weeks to three months to complete a single quilt. Her largest project to date—abstract quilt 5 “Pandora’s Box”—is for her friend chef Victor Magsaysay’s home in Subic.
“I learned about the community of women that creates the quilts of Gee’s Bend and I was taken by their beautiful geometrically intricate quilts. I knew right away that I wanted to make my own quilts,” Ganse writes in an email.
She’s referring to a historically Black community that lived in an isolated hamlet along Alabama river, whose roots trace back as far as the early 19th-century cotton slave trade. Ferry services to and from the community were only restored in 2006, which meant that the small community of roughly 300 inhabitants lived in relative isolation for more than a hundred years.
But isolation is sometimes the bedfellow of creativity. The women of Gee’s Bend developed a tradition of quiltmaking which was passed down from mother to daughter. The quilts were then a departure from traditional quiltmaking. Gee’s Bend quilts were distinct, known for their “lively improvisations and geometric simplicity.” In 2003, 60 Bender quilts made from 1930 to 2000 were exhibited at the Whitney Museum. The New York Times called it some of the most “miraculous works of modern art America has ever produced.”
In a similar fashion, 36-year-old Ganse turned to quiltmaking during Manila’s strictest lockdowns. She begins with a sketch of the shapes, pinning down the colors and textures she wants to feature in her quilts. Afterwards, each of her quilts are painstakingly handsewn. Depending on the size of the quilt, it takes Ganse anywhere between two weeks to three months to complete a single quilt.
“It is a slow process that I really enjoy and don’t want to rush,” she says.
“I learned about the community of women that creates the quilts of Gee’s Bend and I was taken by their beautiful geometrically intricate quilts. I knew right away that I wanted to make my own quilts,” Ganse writes in an email.
She’s referring to a historically Black community that lived in an isolated hamlet along Alabama river, whose roots trace back as far as the early 19th-century cotton slave trade. Ferry services to and from the community were only restored in 2006, which meant that the small community of roughly 300 inhabitants lived in relative isolation for more than a hundred years.
But isolation is sometimes the bedfellow of creativity. The women of Gee’s Bend developed a tradition of quiltmaking which was passed down from mother to daughter. The quilts were then a departure from traditional quiltmaking. Gee’s Bend quilts were distinct, known for their “lively improvisations and geometric simplicity.” In 2003, 60 Bender quilts made from 1930 to 2000 were exhibited at the Whitney Museum. The New York Times called it some of the most “miraculous works of modern art America has ever produced.”
In a similar fashion, 36-year-old Ganse turned to quiltmaking during Manila’s strictest lockdowns. She begins with a sketch of the shapes, pinning down the colors and textures she wants to feature in her quilts. Afterwards, each of her quilts are painstakingly handsewn. Depending on the size of the quilt, it takes Ganse anywhere between two weeks to three months to complete a single quilt.
“It is a slow process that I really enjoy and don’t want to rush,” she tells me.
Depending on the size of the quilt, it takes Ganse anywhere between two weeks to three months to complete a single quilt. Her largest project to date—abstract quilt 5 “Pandora’s Box”—is for her friend chef Victor Magsaysay’s home in Subic.
On modeling and training to become a furrier
In 2021, Ganse exhibited four quilts at The Den Manila, each piece a play on the tension between colors and shapes. The quilts were created between August to September of that year, around the time the second enhanced community quarantine was imposed. “Each stitch is connected to a moment, a breath, a story,” she writes on Instagram.
Filipina-German Ganse has been living in Manila since 2008. She became muse and model of choice for many high fashion editorials and runways, walking for Tippi Ocampo, Jojie Lloren, and Rajo Laurel. She also frequently modeled for small, slow fashion labels like Rô, Eairth, Áraw, and Josanna. But before her life in Manila, Ganse was training to become a professional furrier.
“I studied fur design in Germany and worked with a couple of fur designers at the same time back in 2004 until 2007. I only stopped when I moved to Manila in 2008,” she recalls. “I started with small modeling jobs when I was a teenager. The fur company I worked for just asked me to model whenever there was an event or for their lookbooks and press releases.” “Before the pandemic, everything was so fast and busy that I wasn’t aware how much I enjoy doing things slowly, and how satisfying the effects of it are.”
After more than a decade of professional modeling, I ask Ganse what it was that made her stay in such a high-pressure industry. She replies that maybe she shouldn’t have. “To be honest, I should have followed my own instinct not to go into modeling for that long,” Ganse writes. Ganse listens to audiobooks while sewing, a better alternative than music, she says, “Because then I don’t end up dancing and abandoning my quilts.” Video courtesy of artist.
Ganse listens to audiobooks while sewing, a better alternative than music, she says, “Because then I don’t end up dancing and abandoning my quilts.” Video courtesy of artist.
Early in 2020, Ganse launched Kostüm V, a selection of archival and vintage clothing she describes as “clothes she sees herself wearing.” While she quietly continues to curate the selection, her vintage collection also figures in her art quilts.
“Sometimes I buy secondhand clothes just because of the quality the fabric has, or the fabric is telling me something,” Ganse says. “I like how a textile becomes soft after many years of use and how the color changes. The DNA and story a piece of used clothing can tell is so interesting.” Textiles as art
Marita’s process begins with a sketch of the shapes, pinning down the colors and textures she wants to feature in her quilts. Behind her on the kitchen wall are sketches of some her latest works.
The intersection of textile and creative disciplines became newly visible under the Berlin-born artist and designer Bauhaus master Anni Albers, whose textile tapestries were a stark contrast to the glass and steel sculptures of her modern contemporaries in the ’60s. She challenged the notion that weaving was merely women’s work, likening weaving to sculptures and architecture. In the ’70s, African-American Faith Ringgold created her famous “story quilts,” which combined oil paint and quilting techniques to tell the stories of African-American culture and to push for civil rights.
The more contemporary fiber artists have embraced the possibilities offered by the slowness and tactility of textiles in art. In an article with the NY Times, textile artist Sophia Narrett had this to say about her work: “When an object is developed by human hands for hundreds of hours, it leaves a quality in the surface that can be sensed.”
Ganse’s latest work is called “Midnight Water City,” which is part of a six-woman group exhibit at Futur:st called “Dwell on Divinities” that opened on March 23. According to Futurist co-founder Samantha Nicole, the show highlights “the otherworldliness of women, non binary, and queer artists.”
“Midnight Water City” is a mix of linen, cotton, cupro, and silk. A row of green and blue triangles run along one side of the quilt as a black moon rises on their horizon. A dark blue ripple gradually increases from one side to the other.
“[I’ve learned] that there is beauty in small imperfections. But to be honest, there is so much more I have to learn about myself.”
“[I’ve learned] that there is beauty in small imperfections. But to be honest, there is so much more I have to learn about myself.”
“[I’ve learned] that there is beauty in small imperfections. But to be honest, there is so much more I have to learn about myself.”
“I was thinking about the cold breeze at night, of sail boats moving with the wind, of a refreshing glass of water in the early hours of the morning,” Ganse tells me.
“Midnight Water City,” her latest work, is part of a six-woman group exhibit at Futur:st in Poblacion, Makati. Photos courtesy of Kiko Escora
It’s made with linen, cotton, cupro, and silk sewn together with a special Japanese thread specifically made for boro stitching called shashiko thread. Ganse favors this cotton thread for its soft yet tight twist.
“Midnight Water City,” her latest work, is part of a six-woman group exhibit at Futur:st in Poblacion, Makati.
Photos courtesy of
Kiko Escora
It’s made with linen, cotton, cupro, and silk, sewn together with a special Japanese thread called shashiko thread—which Ganse favors for its soft yet tight twist.
“Before the pandemic, everything was so fast and busy that I wasn’t aware how much I enjoy doing things slowly, and how satisfying the effects of it are. It clears my mind in a way, and helps me to find a tender way to tell stories.”
When I ask Ganse about what quilting has taught her, she tells me that it has been a lesson in enjoying the slowness, to see a quilt through without obsessing over the small details.
“[I’ve learned] that there is beauty in small imperfections. But to be honest, there is so much more I have to learn about myself,” she says. ●> Part I of III of Nolisoli.ph’s Women’s Month SpecialFor Women’s Month 2022, we interviewed three artists whose works explore the intersection and possibilities of gender and creativity: Marita Ganse on the artistic value of “women’s work;” Jessica Dorizac on juxtaposing forms, layering meaning; and Shireen Seno on mapping the self through filmmaking.
FEATURED QUILT
“Half Light Of Dawn”
Linen, cotton, cupro, double gauze backing,
polyfiber wadding, sashiko thread
211cm x 211cm
2022
On display at The Drawing Room as part of group show “The hem of a long conversation” curated by Con Cabrera Written by Toni Potenciano
Cover photography by Joseph Pascual
Creative direction by Nimu Muallam
Art drection by Levenspeil Sangalang
Actress Dexter Doria is known for her “kontrabida” roles on television. But offscreen, she is most furious about misinformation, especially surrounding martial law years under the rule of the late dictator Ferdinand Marcos.
Doria, 66, played an activist nun in a Vince Tañada-directed musical film called “Katips” last year. In an interview, she recounts her experience as a University of the Philippines student during the First Quarter Storm of 1970. She can attest to the atrocities of that period because she was there, she said.
This 2022, she has made it her personal advocacy to enlighten those who willfully believe martial law misinformation circulating on social media even though you could easily disprove these claims with a simple Google search.
“Ako po si Nana Didi, samahan niyo po akong itama ang mga mali at peke sa social media,” a post dated January 10 on the actress’ Facebook page reads. It’s accompanied by a video of her dressed as a teacher addressing a class behind the screen. Her first lesson? Confirmation bias.
Episodes of “Didiserye”, as the series is called, are relatively short at three minutes. Just enough not to drag TikTok-obsessed viewers trained to only consume minute-long media. It’s uploaded weekly on Facebook and YouTube, where false information seemed to have found its captive audience.
With just two episodes out, the series seemed to have hit gold with social media-savvy millennials and Gen Z. The first episode has been viewed over half a million times and shared eleven thousand times on Facebook with twenty-three thousand reactions. Apart from its short attention span-friendly duration, Doria’s delivery is easy to get along with, casual but still maintains an air of authority, thanks to her teacher character.
It’s not alienating for older audiences outside of the two aforementioned demographics, too. Doria, if anything, seems like a tita speaking to her amigas over a video call, albeit the tea being facts and not mere rumors.
Nana Didi’s motto in the show is “Hindi paninira ang pagsasabi ng totoo,” a comeback at critics who are likely to target the show for so-called bias. After all, the elections are just a few months away and the son of the late dictator is running as president. Her latest video released this week debunks martial law myths about the country’s supposed “golden era” and the so-called “comfortable life” Filipinos lived during the Marcoses’ decades-long regime.
Admittedly, the actress is not keen on voting for Ferdinand Marcos Jr. though. “Kasi, hindi lang naman dahil yung tatay, ginawa ito, e. It’s because… yung taong tatakbo, wala talagang kaalam-alam,” she said in one interview.
Nonetheless, what she wants viewers to take away from “Didiserye” is not to take sides, but to not take anything at face value and learn how to fact-check. A timely reminder as we near election season.
Doria’s series is a refreshing sight to see on our feeds often riddled with news about this and that politician lumped together with political ads.
As one millennial friend put it, “I wish all boomers are like her.”
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PROFILE
The queer Filipino-American chef keeping kamayan alive—and meat-free—in New York
How chef Woldy Reyes of boutique catering company Woldy Kusina went from questioning caldereta to championing the communal way of eating with bare hands
by
CHRISTIAN SAN JOSEWoldy Reyes’s earliest memories of food include trips to the butcher with his father and brothers, then going home carrying a black bag with goat meat in it. His Batangueño father would then fire up a pit in their backyard in Walnut, California, and begin the slow process of stewing what would days (!) later become calderetang kambing.
Woldy considers his father and his grandmother (on his mother side) the reasons why he loves cooking so much. Photographed at his Brooklyn residence by Nikki Ruiz
“I still intensely remember the smell of fresh outdoor air and garlic, red onions, and jalapeños being sautéed on the open fire,” the chef says.
As a child, Woldy couldn’t understand why they couldn’t just have barbecues like a typical American family instead of a stew cooked in a cauldron that could feed an entire block. “It was almost embarrassing for me to have this huge outdoor fire with the smell of wood burning and sizzling goat meat; I could only imagine what the neighbors were thinking.”
His mother’s side from Manila also migrated to the U.S., so Woldy and his brothers grew up having them around. He and his twin brother would spend afternoons at their grandmother’s, his lola lovingly filling bowls with champorado. He loved it, but still he was clueless as to why he had to have a “second lunch”—merienda in Filipino.
This is not a new feeling for children of immigrants trying to understand their parents’ insistence on embracing the culture of the land they left behind for the promise of America. “Food was her first line of defense against a deep and abiding fear of the Other,” writes Grace M. Cho in the food memoir “Tastes Like War.”
As in “Crying in H Mart” by Korean-American singer and writer Michelle Zauner, Cho, the daughter of a white American merchant marine and a Korean bar hostess, tries to “write her mother back into existence.” Korean culinary heritage is a bridge through which they reconcile their identities and that of their parents.
Woldy’s culinary rekindling didn’t occur until his 30s. By then he was coming to terms with not just his Filipino roots but also his hearing disability and his identity as a gay man.
It happened in 2019, in the company of fellow queer people who share the same love for food at an event called “Pride Table.” He served a reinterpretation of his late father’s calderetang kambing. But instead of steamed white rice, it came topped with a crisp fried rice wrapper typically used for spring rolls.
“Breaking it reveals what is me and what my food culture is,” he says, referring to cracking the rice crisp. “Coming through [the cracks] are these different bold flavors that are me; I am all of these different things.”
“I still intensely remember the smell of fresh outdoor air and garlic, red onions, and jalapeños being sautéed on the open fire,” the chef says.
As a child, Woldy couldn’t understand why they couldn’t just have barbecues like a typical American family instead of a stew cooked in a cauldron that could feed an entire block. “It was almost embarrassing for me to have this huge outdoor fire with the smell of wood burning and sizzling goat meat; I could only imagine what the neighbors were thinking.”
His mother’s side from Manila also migrated to the U.S., so Woldy and his brothers grew up having them around. He and his twin brother would spend afternoons at their grandmother’s, his lola lovingly filling bowls with champorado. He loved it, but still he was clueless as to why he had to have a “second lunch”—merienda in Filipino.
This is not a new feeling for children of immigrants trying to understand their parents’ insistence on embracing the culture of the land they left behind for the promise of America. “Food was her first line of defense against a deep and abiding fear of the Other,” writes Grace M. Cho in the food memoir “Tastes Like War.”
Woldy considers his father and his grandmother (on his mother side) the reasons why he loves cooking so much. Photographed at his Brooklyn residence by Nikki Ruiz
As in “Crying in H Mart” by Korean-American singer and writer Michelle Zauner, Cho, the daughter of a white American merchant marine and a Korean bar hostess, tries to “write her mother back into existence.” Korean culinary heritage is a bridge through which they reconcile their identities and that of their parents.
Woldy’s culinary rekindling didn’t occur until his 30s. By then he was coming to terms with not just his Filipino roots but also his hearing disability and his identity as a gay man.
It happened in 2019, in the company of fellow queer people who share the same love for food at an event called “Pride Table.” He served a reinterpretation of his late father’s calderetang kambing. But instead of steamed white rice, it came topped with a crisp fried rice wrapper typically used for spring rolls.
“Breaking it reveals what is me and what my food culture is,” he says, referring to cracking the rice crisp. “Coming through [the cracks] are these different bold flavors that are me; I am all of these different things.”
Fashioning a Filipino food concept
A few years before that, Woldy was nowhere near modernizing Filipino flavors and giving it a plant-centric twist. A graduate of hotel and restaurant management, he left his suburban California town for New York. From visual merchandising, he progressed to the ranks of intern to assistant at fashion magazines before landing a sales job at Phillip Lim, where he worked for five and a half years.
“I knew that food was in me to tap into later,” he said in an interview in 2019. But he needed to see where his interest in fashion could take him. Eventually, years in the industry had him yearning for a change of environment. This is when his 180-degree pivot to cooking happened.
“When I’m thinking about the things that I grew up eating,
I constantly think of how I could remake it using seasonal produce.”
“When I get into a kitchen there is a different feeling. I’m creating and there’s joy in it,” he added in the same interview.
Woldy Kusina, a boutique catering company that prides itself on using seasonal and locally sourced produce, was launched in 2016. He started small, making fresh and vegetable-forward spreads of colorful crudites, herb-embedded frittatas, salads of blood oranges, and naturally-dyed hummus for friends’ intimate gatherings. Soon, he was creating designer banquets for fashion brands like Rebecca Minkoff, Christian Louboutin, Derek Lam, Moda Operandi, and MatchesFashion, with which he later collaborated on a pop-up café named after his business.
Beet-cured organic salmon, heirloom tomatoes, red onions, cucumbers, red radishes, capers, dill, cream cheese, and multigrain bread.
Photo by
Cristian V. Candami
Beet-cured organic salmon, heirloom tomatoes, red onions, cucumbers, red radishes, capers, dill, cream cheese, and multigrain bread. Photo by
Cristian V. Candami
These relationships are made in fashion heaven. Woldy knew how obsessed this crowd is with aesthetics and how they could be health-conscious. “I understood my fashion clients and what they wanted to eat—primarily very vegetable-focused meals.”
New York publications then started catching up with Woldy Kusina. Gwyneth Paltrow’s goop included the caterer in its New York services directory, while New York Magazine’s The Cut named his caviar-and-avocado multigrain toast and fall-vegetable hash with butternut squash, Tuscan kale, oyster mushrooms, prosciutto di Parma, and soft-boiled egg, “breakfast foods worth serving at a black-tie wedding.”Produce may have front row seats at his fashion feasts but Woldy—the person and the company—is not exclusively vegan. Occasionally he would do animal protein like a scarlet red beet-cured organic salmon (responsibly caught, of course). “I am very strategic about eating meat,” he says. “That’s also compounded with the world that we’re living in right now and how that’s going to affect future generations. I think it’s very important that we progress into eating more plant-based.”
“I had that sort of internal struggle like, ‘Is this really Filipino?’ But then again, I am Filipino-American and I think I’m bridging those two together.”
His inclination towards fresh produce he takes from his lola’s vegetable-filled kitchen. Living on the East Coast where harvest is dictated by the seasons also influenced him. Among his favorites are purple ninja and watermelon radishes chiefly for the color they impart on Filipino dishes known for its browns, oranges, and deep reds—a reason why Woldy wasn’t a fan of his father’s caldereta decades before.
“When I’m thinking about the things that I grew up eating, I constantly think of how I could remake it using seasonal produce,” he says. “Knowing that Filipino dishes are very hearty and meaty, I try to find vegetables that are also hearty. And I obviously love color so I try to bridge the two together.” ‘With boodle fight, is a fight going to happen?’
A year before his caldereta remake, Woldy was in the New York Times for another Filipino dish he made for Queer Soup Night, a Brooklyn-born international community kitchen raising funds for LGBTQ+ causes. It was sotanghon with shredded chicken breast and transparent vermicelli noodles swimming in a garlicky broth.
A year later, he did a rainbow rendition of pancit with colorful radishes (purple ninja, watermelon, daikon, Chinese rose), garlic chives, and confetti flowers for good measure.
The question of whether his take on Filipino cuisine is authentic or not is never lost on Woldy. Migrant cooks, after all, tend to be most riddled with the dilemma of representing “real Filipino food,” as the late Clinton Palanca wrote.
“I had that sort of internal struggle like, ‘Is this really Filipino?’ But then again, I am Filipino-American and I think I’m bridging those two together,” he self-assesses. A kamayan spread by Woldy at Maiden Hotel. Photo by Noah Fecks
A kamayan spread by Woldy at Maiden Hotel.
Photo by Noah Fecks
In lieu of the key Filipino condiments like toyo, or the many specific kinds of suka that trapeze between sour and sweet, Woldy has streamlined his own substitutes. He’s distilled Filipino tastes to accessible ingredients (tamari, coconut vinegar, or plain distilled vinegar) without losing the beating heart of each dish: infallible depth of flavor.
This improvisation is on full display at his kamayan series that started in late 2019. It’s based on the Filipino communal way of eating on a banana leaf laid with steamed white rice and a variety of viands, from roasted vegetables and seafood to saucy stews and hearty soups. While it is popularly known here as “boodle fight,” Woldy went with the term “kamayan” as it translates to a more amicable eating experience. “With boodle fight, is a fight going to happen?” he jokes. (The term did originate from a military tradition, so who knows?) Plus, it is nowhere near your typical boodle fight spread.
Banana leaves were piled with adobong hen-of-the-woods, cauliflower Bicol Express, kabocha squash kare-kare and lumpia. All these were served over spice-infused steamed rice. For dessert, Woldy’s frequent collaborator, gluten-free baker Lani Halliday, made small bibingka topped with edible gold, peanut brittle, and guava cream cheese.
The kamayan dinner landed a T Magazine review and praise from Filipino-Hawaiian food and culture critic Ligaya Mishan, who called it “thoroughly modern.”
Woldy and Lani during their Kamayan dinner in February 2020. Photo by Joshua Bouman
Setting the table for a kamayan feast. Photo by Joshua Bouman
Woldy and Lani during
their Kamayan dinner
in February 2020
Setting the table for a kamayan feast. Photos by Joshua Bouman
Unlike a typical kamayan, theirs was held in the most unlikely of venues: inside the Flatiron’s Maiden Hotel with a $100 ticket charge. It ran until the onset of the pandemic in March, right up until eating so close together along with other “rituals” of kamayan were deemed public health hazards.
“I remember the hotel’s general manager calling me as I was getting ready for the dinner to ask if I want to still do it but have hand sanitizers on the table,” Woldy recalls. “I’m like, ‘Let me just think about it.’ I worked really hard to create this Filipino food cultural experience and it’s plant-based, but at the time, I didn’t understand the severity of what was happening. I decided to just cancel it because I thought having hand sanitizers on the table took out the romance of that part of eating.” A slice of pie for queer POC chefs
Woldy at Fort Greene Park in Brooklyn photographed by Nikki Ruiz
Woldy is hardly the first to bring kamayan to New York. In fact, he recalls having first heard of it through Nicole Ponseca’s Jeepney, a Filipino gastropub in East Village. Ponseca, who’s also behind Jeepney’s predecessor Maharlika, is credited for popularizing eating with bare hands in New York.
Jeepney’s feast on banana leaves is closer to the kamayan experience in the homeland, with familiar forms and flavors and none of the plant-based alternatives. Think rice with tocino cured in 7Up, longganisa, and pork stewed in “a fascinating chocolate-colored sauce of beef blood,” as per food critic Pete Wells’ review.
Woldy at Fort Greene Park in Brooklyn photographed by Nikki Ruiz
“I think being visible and sharing our story is important so that we can change the traditional white man-run kitchen into something where more people of color are in charge.”
Chef and writer Yana Gilbuena, on the other hand, in 2014, set out to decentralize Filipino food’s fame away from major U.S. cities by hosting kamayan-style pop-ups in all 50 states. She told Eating Well magazine in July this year: “Well, what about the folks in Kentucky? Or Maine? Do they have to travel to New York just to get a taste? I said, f**k it. I’ll just go bring it to them!”
Then there’s queer Filipinx chef Silver Cousler, the mind behind what would be Ashville, North Carolina’s first Filipinx restaurant, Neng Jr.’s. In February this year, they partnered with cook and writer Alison Roman for a boodle fight in Savannah, Georgia, which doubled as a fundraiser for their restaurant.
“I think being visible and sharing our story is important so that we can change the traditional white man-run kitchen into something where more people of color
are in charge.”
Silver and Woldy share more in common beyond their queer identities and Filipino roots. While the former has worked in formal restaurant settings and the latter is more versed in running kitchens with free rein, they both dream of a more inclusive and safer working environment for queer chefs of color. In a piece for Thrillist earlier this year, Silver wrote of the possibility of a restaurant environment where people of color have an equal slice of the proverbial pie. “I think a lot of that (inequalities) can disappear just with equitable pay all around. I know it’s not always possible for all restaurants, but with my restaurant, it’s absolutely possible and I’m going to make it happen.” Neng Jr.’s is scheduled to open this year.
For Woldy, it’s high time queer and people of color are given the long-overdue credit for their food cultures that white men have profited off of. “We’re trying to break the door, break the ceiling to create more of a safer space for people like us to thrive and be in without being suppressed,” he says. “That’s what’s happening now. I think being visible and sharing our story is important so that we can change the traditional white man-run kitchen into something where more people of color are in charge, and it’s hopefully a safe environment for work in, too. That’s what I’m hopeful for.” Rice that binds
Woldy’s bibingka with coconut glaze. Photo by Kelsey Cherry
2020 marked a decade of Woldy living in New York. Like any other queer individual welcomed by the city, he has his own chosen family.
This includes Lani and pastry chef Eric See. They all had their start at a community kitchen for food start-ups called Brooklyn Food Works, which is now Pilotworks Brooklyn after it was bought out in 2018. The change in management left the businesses it used to shelter without a place to operate. Eric decided to get their own space, which became Ursula, a New Mexican café in Brooklyn. Woldy was one of the LGBTQ+ guest chefs he invited. “I thank him for that, that he was able to save my business,” he says.
Up until the easing of restrictions in the city, he was unable to do catering with social gatherings on hold. What he did instead was pay it forward to his community. He’s made meals for folks at Ali Forney Center, a non-profit providing shelter and healthcare services to underprivileged LGBTQ+ youth. He also organized food drives for health frontliners, making sustaining and vibrantly-plated meals, like pancit with creamy sesame ginger dressing and a chicken adobo and portobello mushrooms sub.
“My brain is always thinking of other ways to make Filipino food even more interesting and progressive.”
When he is not doing all that, you can find him at various pop-ups in the city along with his chef friends, where, again, he is pushing the Filipino food agenda. One of the places he frequents is Hunky Dory by Filipino-American restaurateur Claire Sprouse in Crown Heights, Brooklyn.
If he’s not there, you can always find him on TikTok, dancing to his divas in the woods, on the road after a run, or in the kitchen in full chef regalia. On Instagram, along with his decidedly New Yorker style (quilted Bode jacket! Eckhaus Latta graphic top! J.Crew basics, of which he was once its campaign star!), his culinary creations are hard to miss. These include his various takes on the classic Filipino kakanin bibingka.
Going back to his mother’s recipe for cassava cake, a fixture in their family’s holiday table, has inspired him to create its cousin from glutinous rice flour. “I made bibingka one day because I was researching Filipino baked goods that were simple enough to make. It’s been like three years of trying to understand how to make bibingka and then finding a recipe that was true to me before it became my go-to recipe.”
His bibingkas are as flamboyant as his fashion banquets. Decked in seasonal produce, he’s made the rice cake in a number of forms: petit fours, pan sheet cake, glazed birthday cake with fruit toppers, loaf wrapped in a blanket of banana leaves. His latest was featured on Bon Appétit, vegan and gluten-free bibingka waffles topped with fresh fruits, toasted coconut flakes, and coconut yogurt. (The traditional recipe calls for eggs and butter, which he substituted with club soda and coconut oil.) It was a dream come true for Woldy to be featured on a revered food publication, and sort of symbolic, too, he adds. “I’m a fan of Bon Appétit. My first [published] recipe is obviously a hybrid of Filipino and American and calling it bibingka waffles is something that’s cool to see.”
What’s next on his mission to bring bibingka to the fore? He’s toying around with mixing cassava and glutinous rice flour, an ode to another pastry creation of his mom. “I’m putting fresh fruit on the bottom of the pan and then inverting it,” he says. “Basically, it’s a take on my dad’s favorite cake, the pineapple upside-down cake.”
He’s also tinkering with using fig leaves as a vessel for bibingka in the absence of banana leaves. “You can actually eat the fig leaves!” he says. “I think that also creates that sort of new but familiar [feeling]. My brain is always thinking of other ways to make Filipino food even more interesting and progressive.”
Woldy currently resides in Brooklyn where he is photographed by Nikki Ruiz
Woldy currently resides in Brooklyn where he is photographed by Nikki Ruiz
Going back to his mother’s recipe for cassava cake, a fixture in their family’s holiday table, has inspired him to create its cousin from glutinous rice flour. “I made bibingka one day because I was researching Filipino baked goods that were simple enough to make. It’s been like three years of trying to understand how to make bibingka and then finding a recipe that was true to me before it became my go-to recipe.”
His bibingkas are as flamboyant as his fashion banquets. Decked in seasonal produce, he’s made the rice cake in a number of forms: petit fours, pan sheet cake, glazed birthday cake with fruit toppers, loaf wrapped in a blanket of banana leaves. His latest was featured on Bon Appétit, vegan and gluten-free bibingka waffles topped with fresh fruits, toasted coconut flakes, and coconut yogurt. (The traditional recipe calls for eggs and butter, which he substituted with club soda and coconut oil.) It was a dream come true for Woldy to be featured on a revered food publication, and sort of symbolic, too, he adds. “I’m a fan of Bon Appétit. My first [published] recipe is obviously a hybrid of Filipino and American and calling it bibingka waffles is something that’s cool to see.”
What’s next on his mission to bring bibingka to the fore? He’s toying around with mixing cassava and glutinous rice flour, an ode to another pastry creation of his mom. “I’m putting fresh fruit on the bottom of the pan and then inverting it,” he says. “Basically, it’s a take on my dad’s favorite cake, the pineapple upside-down cake.”
He’s also tinkering with using fig leaves as a vessel for bibingka in the absence of banana leaves. “You can actually eat the fig leaves!” he says. “I think that also creates that sort of new but familiar [feeling]. My brain is always thinking of other ways to make Filipino food even more interesting and progressive.”
Written and produced by Christian San Jose
Cover photography by Nikki Ruiz
Creative direction by Nimu Muallam
Art drection, layout and design by Levenspeil SangalangPHOTO BY NIKKI RUIZ
There are two kinds of plant collectors: one who collects them for the inherent aesthetic value they lend to their space, and another who believes in the practical air filtering abilities of plants. This is obviously a false dichotomy; there are people who collect plants for luck, too. And then there’s Bacolod-based artist Kris Ardeña.
After living in the US, Madrid, Luxembourg, Germany (he speaks English, Filipino, Spanish, Cebuano, Ilonggo, and a few other languages), Ardeña currently shares a 200-sqm home/gallery/workshop with his band of creators, his paintings, and his plants.
“BTW, I don’t consider myself a collector of plants. I’m more for their emo aesthetic quality,” he opened our exchange over Instagram direct message. “The plants I have are common outdoor plants. (They) evoke more the psychology of familiarity.” Some of his favorites are begonias for their colors and variety; agave because it reminds him of the beach house he grew up in; and palms for the tropical feeling they evoke.
“I don’t consider myself a collector of plants. I’m more for their emo aesthetic quality… (They) evoke more the psychology of familiarity.”
The artist was quick to clarify, however, that his indoor garden was in no way triggered by the pandemic. “It was already planned before: the papag, the plants. Nature is inevitable in the rural tropics, so it becomes integral, but not something I necessarily seek.”
The papag he’s talking about is the Filipino version of a bed made with splintered bamboo panels and sometimes coco lumber legs. It can be laid with banig for sleeping. In Ardeña’s case, it’s an integral part of his studio setup, designed to mimic the elevated entrance to a nipa hut.
Occasionally the papag is a platform for his shrubs, vines and small trees (he has an indoor potted palm and a malunggay tree) in the living room—although there’s hardly any room to speak of. He tore down the walls to create an open plan, with space transformed depending on his needs; his bedroom, for example, is hardly a space for sleeping as it is an exhibition space and a backroom for his works.
‘Why paint plants’
“The plants form part of what we do; it ties into the philosophy of how I create,” he said.
How does an artist like him work then?
For those who know his oeuvre, Ardeña is most recently known for his bigger than life paintings of the ubiquitous Filipino household object basahan, a floor rag woven out of scrap fabric.
Before the lockdown, Manila’s art crowd got a glimpse of these six-foot-tall cracked tarpaulin paintings at Tropical Future Institute’s booth at Art Fair, where it was exhibited along with everyday Filipino objects like the pabitin, a suspended bamboo trellis with snacks hanging from it, which is a staple at children’s birthday parties and fiestas.
A year before that, these “ghost paintings”—referring to the application of several layers of paint to a surface and allowing them to crack like the walls of tropical houses that humidity transforms from a once smooth surface to a textured one—were exhibited at the annual Art Dubai international art fair.
“It’s a material that’s readily available to me where I am right now,” Ardeña said of the basahan series in 2020. “It was just there and that’s why I use it. That’s the ingenuity of adaptive reuse. It’s not about recycling, it’s about the possibility of the material itself.” It was not to reproduce cultural symbols as new tropical aesthetics or even to evoke a feeling of nationalism. In the same interview about his Art Fair paintings, he was quoted as saying, “To claim a national identity as an artist is limiting and insular. My identity is more complex than that.”
Those paintings take time and lots of hands to make. For a 7×10-ft painting called “Macho Dancer,” it took Ardeña and his team eight months to fill the whole woven PVC fiber canvas with 2×2-cm squares of the basahan. His latest work, a 7×10-ft painting patterned after the Ilocano binakol weave, takes this exercise in patience to the extreme with 0.3 cm squares.
To paint a leaf can be just as powerful as a whole discursive post-conceptual work full of information about…. I don’t know? the coronavirus, for example.”
The potted plants in his studio aren’t just for aesthetics but also for meditation. “You get lost here in time [as you work] because (the space) is calm and peaceful.”
As if to reinforce this thinking, he recently posted a self-interrogatory question on Instagram: “Why paint plants? Because it accumulates time.”
To him, plants also serve a tangible purpose, as in he literally uses leaves among other plant parts as part of his work while drawing inspiration from them.
On his Instagram profile are a few works from banana leaf etchings like a skull drawn for leisure and a piece of green scribbles on a painted white canvas. “What do you do with leftover anahaw leaves?” he asked in one post. “Incorporate them in your painting.”
In another post, he shared an in situ of one of his cracked paintings pinned to a papaya tree growing in his neighborhood. The unsuspecting fruit-bearing trees are owned by his neighbor’s wife.
His most recent post as of writing is a bunch of dried acacia leaves shaped like a cork, presumably related to a new work: a block covered in gumamela leaves.
But do not be fooled; his identity as an artist is more complex than plants. He’ll be the first one to point out that his work—even his earlier ones—is not wholly influenced by these living organisms. “I don’t like to work with specific themes in my work. Puff, how boring.
“I want to allow themes to be embodied in my work whether formally in the technique or in the material aspect, not necessarily within the thematic approach. To paint a leaf can be just as powerful as a whole discursive post-conceptual work full of information about…. I don’t know? the coronavirus, for example,” he said.
The social and anti-social uses of plants
It turns out he is also the second kind of plant collector I described previously. He hates air conditioning and in a way, the plants make the air circulate throughout his space, reducing the need for mechanical ventilation. In fact, his whole 200-sqm studio only uses three electric fans and consumes only P1,000-worth of electricity a month. He joked that his internet bill costs much more. Welcome to the Philippines, I said, where slow internet connection costs a fortune.
Ardeña has been living in his open-plan space with its nine-foot ceiling, matte white walls (which make for a good test hang background as they absorb light), and a decent amount of natural lighting for two years now. But so far, he has enjoyed working with other painters whom he recruited from neighboring towns. “I like my crew. We hang out, drink together, barbecue on the rooftop. There are always cases of beer and wine in the studio.”
There’s also his famous neighbor: a handicraft place called Artisana Island Crafts. It’s pretty legendary, he told me. “In the ’70s, José Joya, Ang Kiukok, and a bunch of other artists came to Bacolod to do ceramics there.” He said he likes to work there sometimes because the people are nice.
He’s generally a sociable person. But on the flip side, one of the reasons he chose to reside in downtown Bacolod—200 km away from his hometown Dumaguete—is because of the anonymity it affords him as an outsider. “Because I am not from here, there’s no gossip, no s**t. I am left alone to work,” he said. “Pinoys love to gossip. I prefer to socially isolate especially from the art people here.”
(Other than that, Ardeña said he loves it there because “I always get energized by the creativity of what I see every day, the ingenuity and the driving force of people who may have very limited resources yet are able to make a thing of beauty.” He has an ongoing photo series called #BalayTropikal that catalogs Bacolod’s street views.)
In a sense, these plants are his company in days of isolation, while serving as a shield from watchful eyes. He dreams of living in a space surrounded by lush tropical vegetation “and far away from gossiping art people,” much like American architects Jacob and Mellisa Brillhart’s tropical modernist bungalow residence in Miami.
But hiding in his own man-made forest would be counterproductive, since some of his plants come from his neighbors, like the ternate (butterfly pea) and the pandanus (the big one used for weaving, not for cooking). He’s currently waiting for a 30-year-old coconut tree bonsai being grown by a friend who lives nearby. It’s expected to arrive around May or June.
“Once we get that in, then we develop the entrance papag setup. It would be crazy to bring that big coconut inside,” he said.
“What’s making us happy” is our weekly list of things we are drooling over or things we bought by impulse or purposefully as of late—anything to distract us from this gloomy quarantine and maddening real world
***
Quarantine may have gotten the best of some (or most) of us, but creative Samantha Nicole is taking things one step at a time. As a co-founder of the beloved queer safe space Today x Future, online radio broadcast service Manila Community Radio, events company UNKNWN, live experience organizer CC: Concepts and Poblacion watering-hole Futur:st—where she also serves as the events director for the last three concepts, with the added bonus of being Futur:st’s music director—Samantha never really runs out of things to do.
During the earlier days of the lockdown, she was kept busy by new projects and online events of her brands’ new projects.
“I [was] preoccupied doing online activations primarily for and with UNKNWN, Today x Future and Futur:st during the earlier part of lockdown. Then [I] started Manila Community Radio with some mates. Currently, relaunching Futur:st with partners has taken up a chunk of my time,” she says.
Futur:st is currently gearing up for their latest show, “F.L.A.M.E.S.” featuring the work of Jeona Zoleta and Willar Matteo.
Aside from an enviable repertoire of projects (and an equally enviable domestic setup), her daily routine is something most of us wish we had.
“I wake up as early as I can, anywhere between 6 a.m. and 8 a.m. then hang around with the dogs. If I’m feeling there’s a bag of extra effort with me when I wake up, I exercise. Then I walk around and check out our plants, make some tea and get to work,” Samantha adds.
“It’s mostly more random from there. Work calls, wife duties, online catch-ups in between, lunch in fluctuating hours, a light dinner, but definitely, a glass (or a bottle) of something alcoholic by the end of the day. A good show to binge, and eventually sleep. “Fleabag” and “[The] Queen’s Gambit” were revelations!” she continues.
“Quarantine blues hit me hard pretty late,” she explains. “It’s only these past two months that my insides feel a lot wonkier, like how it is when you’ve been tricked into riding the Space Shuttle in Enchanted Kingdom for the first time, not knowing it’s going to flip over and you’ll need to swallow your vomit upside down.”
On the list of what’s been making her happy, literal things have been a lifesaver.
“I admit: I’m quite materialistic. I spend way too much on things that clutter up space but still spark joy. Some, more than others, are cradling me through this pandemic.”
Friend-lent and auction-won books
“Books remain closest to me. Growing up, I was always happiest when my mom would drop me off at Powerbooks, Alabang Town Center with some scrunched up thousand peso bills. More when it was my birthday. My shelf remains my refuge, my pride and what I show off every time we have guests over.
I’m currently hooked on “The First Bad Man” by Miranda July. The book was lent to me by a dear friend, and it’s one I haven’t put down for consecutive days after a long time. (P.S.: Do watch her latest and ever the anti-ordinary film, “Kajillionaire”). Currently alternating this with Simone de Beauvoir’s “All Men Are Mortal,” a book I earned after zealously awaiting for an online auction to go live a couple of months back.”
Cooking for my sanity
“I didn’t grow up cooking. In fact, I served my then-girlfriend, now-wife fried egg without salting it when I was 19. Thankfully, everything about this bit worked out—including discovering the joy of cooking.
I get kilig each time I use my knives. They’re the sexiest ones in the kitchen, next to the one I’m actually serving the meals to ;). They’ve been teaching me better skills, and I’m steadily earning their trust, albeit all the cuts and nicks my skin’s fashioning now. While I have you here, please remember to cut the roots of your coriander, place them in a jar with a bit of water and cover them with a plastic bag then store in the fridge. Coriander for dayssss.”
Wine, lots of it
“I’ve doubled—okay, tripled—my alcohol intake since this shitshow started. That’s a lot, even coming from someone who works in the events and nightlife industry. Wine in particular. Along the way, I’ve begun to appreciate them a lot more (on top of drinking them), and I am scared I am turning into a pretentious snob. There’s a thought process here: learn from your pleasures.
A very long way to go, but I’ve been learning more about wines. I’m a sponge and I accept healthy pours and spills. Just squeeze me a bit and I’m ready for absorption all over again.”
Futur:st
“We lost Today x Future last July, and it is still the tenderest spot I don’t want to get into right now, like this deep, soft wound that’s taking a long time to heal. Reopening Futur:st last October has definitely helped us cope with the loss. It feels like the space is breathing new air; we’re almost certainly hopeful we can keep this going for a longer time.
The idea is creatives helping creatives, and frankly, I’m quite proud of this pivot. Also, I’m very thankful for the support we’ve been receiving.”
My dogs
“Meet my bosses: One named after a Studio Ghibli character, the other, after a porn star. Without these two, I feel like I would’ve completely lost it.
There are days when you want to just curl up in bed, cover yourself from head to toe with a thick blanket, and let the day turn to night. All of a sudden, you feel a gentle, singular lick on your foot. You uncover your face and see these demanding eyes staring you down: ‘I need to eat my homemade chicken with virgin coconut oil, gluten-free tamari, and grated carrots.’ Depression can wait. A dog’s hunger? Never.”
“Go at your own pace, one thing at a time. I really should follow my own advice, considering how I am always too much of a restless workaholic multitasker. But really, this is one tip that I really hold on to and try to consciously remind myself of, whether it’s for work or pleasure,” she says.
At the end of the day, what we’re all really waiting for is the end of this pandemic. Samantha’s post-pandemic plans are simple (and extremely relatable).
“[I want to] get out of the city and stay somewhere far away for a long time!”
And to that, we wholeheartedly agree.
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“What’s making us happy” is our weekly list of things we are drooling over or things we bought by impulse or purposefully as of late—anything to distract us from this gloomy quarantine and maddening real world
***
Even in isolation, there’s no such thing as idle time for Noel Manapat. Aside from being a creative consultant for clothing and retail conglomerate Suyen Corporation, Noel is a stylist who works on special projects and commissions for commercial shoots, designer shows and trade events.
Although the pandemic has changed the way the creative industry functions, he keeps his plate full with work and a variety of other things to do.
But just like most of us, the great indoors was something Noel had gotten well acquainted with during quarantine—and for him, it was fairly fine. “I’m an introvert and isolation can sometimes be bliss. It is also bliss to shield yourself from negative thoughts and online noise. A good afternoon is a time spent browsing through books I haven’t read while listening to Chet Baker,” he says.
Don’t get him wrong though, because when asked what he wanted to do after the longest quarantine in the world is over, he says, “I’d like to hug all my loved ones, family and friends, and maybe a few lovely strangers?”
This huge yearning for human contact isn’t very surprising, though. After all, Noel took isolation very seriously during the nationwide lockdown’s beginning.
“For the first three months of the lockdown, I never ventured beyond our village gate. I live with my mother and we survived on online deliveries, from grocery supplies to frozen goods and electric water pumps to products made by family, friends and other lockdown entrepreneurs who needed support,” reveals Noel.
“A good afternoon is a time spent browsing through books I haven’t read while listening to Chet Baker.”
Noel himself put up a food venture in quarantine, one inspired by heirloom recipes and regional delicacies from his hometown in Pampanga.
“I unearthed old folders including a business plan I made more than a decade ago for a restaurant concept [called] Carmen and Consorcia Community Kitchen, named after my grandmothers,” says Noel.
It’s been five months now since he started running Carmen and Consorcia as an online shop. Although Noel says that he is “still on a learning curve,” he has successfully participated in multiple pop-ups with Katutubo Pop-up Market already.
He also received offers to open physical stores and made some partnerships. But he considers among the main highlights of his venture his being able to “share Made in Pampanga and heritage delicacies to a wider market, including an 18th-century recipe that you cannot find anywhere else.”
Aside from Carmen and Consorcia, here are the things that have been keeping Noel’s hands full and providing him bliss while on lockdown.
Making his room’s floor look drama-worthy
Things as mundane as wiping room floors can bring therapeutic joy too, especially if you’ve got a very special motivation for it.
“Down on all fours, my goal is to have the floor as clean as the Thai BL [boys’ love] sets whose barefooted actors never get their feet dirty,” says Noel.
Going on a (strenuous but worthwhile) basket hunt online
“Bamboo, sea grass, or rattan? It’s both a frustrating and exhilarating exercise to look for everyday baskets. It has become much more convenient to import items from Vietnam, Thailand and China through online channels.”
Noel also cites the book “Philippine Basketry” by Robert Lane while talking about his latest affinity. Noting the product’s huge potential, he echoes Lane’s claim that “our basketry tradition is rich and can be a thriving minefield of treasures” if it were only easier to buy online.
Throwing a film festival—at home
“I have a cineaste friend who’s been sharing with me some beautiful films (“Burning” from Korea, “Portrait of a Lady on Fire” from France and “Shoplifters” from Japan). It’s been my alternative to Netflix.”
Stepping up his footwear game
“I’ve found comfortable pairs of handmade loafers that I’ve been eyeing through Assembly Philippines, including some handmade Grenson’s and these Fratelli Rossetti pair that retails for P36,395, but were on sale for P3,500. Still can’t believe how good a deal I got.”
Making scrumptious sandwiches with his shop’s products
“I’ve been having a bread moment lately, experimenting with our pantry staples. Some favorites: Paul Boulangerie’s big pandesal with my mother’s radish and carrot atchara and our own Carmen and Consorcia’s longganisa macao. I finish it off with some truffle mayo and mustard.
Surprisingly good too: Paul Boulangerie’s brioche buns with Mamata’s cheese pimento and our Carmen and Consorcia’s pork embutido. It’s a joy to have on any afternoon.”
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Two weeks before the dreaded global interruption, Toqa, a local label by two Rhode Island School of Design alumni focused on tropical-appropriate garments made with deadstock fabric, unveiled what would be its new collection at Bellas Artes Outpost in Chino Roces Avenue. Gathered in a sea of dancing bodies were the brand’s band of creatives, including the filmmaker Jan Pineda.
A day before the Luzon-wide lockdown was announced, he posted a selfie of him trying on one of the looks from Toqa’s collection. It was a “latergram,” one of the many he would post in the stretch of the world’s longest lockdown.
In another post dated July 21, Jan can be seen lifting what looked like a big oval stone with one hand while sitting down. It’s from the same party. He captioned it “how I thought 2020 will be 😂.”
What followed, of course, none of us could have predicted. For him, it unfolded off-grid—Jan’s life off-Instagram. While he filled his feed with photos from better days (more latergrams), his work as Globe Studios’ manager resumed, shooting music videos (remotely and occasionally on set) for some of the country’s rising talents.
He’s since moved houses and celebrated his birthday—another “milestone” (if you can call it that) he didn’t see coming having been born in the last month of the year. Who would have known we would still be in lockdown by now?
“This year tore me apart but [I’m] still thankful for many things,” he wrote on a post on his birthday days before this story came out.
These “many things” include stuff he now lists here: “things that make the grind a little happier for me.”
Toqa Boulder bags
“Had to shoot music videos while Manila was under general community quarantine (GCQ) and theseToqa bags made carrying alcohol, masks and a clean pen easier. It’s perfect when you need to run around, fill up forms and sanitize constantly (also the bright cheerful color helps!)”
“semilucent” mixtape
“One of the music videos I worked on was for Paradise Rising, 88rising and Globe Telecom’s new music collective representing the next wave of artists from the Philippines. I got LSS working on the project. The mixtape is enjoyable to listen to during morning work. Also, #PinoyPride 🇵🇭.”
Home/workplace decor
“I recently moved to a bare apartment in the middle of the pandemic and wanted to decorate the place immediately for some work from home inspiration. Found this easy-to-use modern steel frame from Habitat to instantly fill the bare white wall. It now frames a poster I got from a trip.”
Work brew
“Before sleeping, I make a batch of cold brew for the next day with this Hario cold brew maker (makes around four to five cups). On hectic days when I need some energy in the middle of the day, I just open the refrigerator. I usually put my cup on this cute stool from Nooke. I love it cause you can easily move it around the house and use it for something else.”
End of day-signaling home scents
“All day zoom calls and organizing can get pretty stressful (and almost without end lol) even extending up to late at night. As an audio-visual worker, I may have underestimated the power of the sense of smell (lol). Recently discovered these room scents from Aesop and Muji and they have helped me a lot to just draw the line when I should stop working. The scent helps send signals to my body that I need to relax for the day.”
Sparkling tea and some reading
“The weekends are good opportunities to catch-up on reading (and some drinking!). I love that this caffeinated sparkling tea I discovered from a trip, Mate Mate, is now available in Manila. It’s also good with alcohol—vodka, scotch or rum.
And these are some books I haven’t been able to finish from the Aperture Foundation. I like drawing inspiration from photographic arts to some of my video work.”
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“What’s making us happy” is our weekly list of things we bought by impulse or purposefully as of late, new-found hobbies, rediscovered pleasures—anything to distract us from this gloomy quarantine and maddening real world
***
Raymond Ang, digital publishing editor of The Wall Street Journal’s weekend lifestyle section, works from home in Manila—on New York time. A professional vampire of sorts, he works from 9 p.m. to 6 a.m. and catches up on sleep from 7 a.m. till 2 in the afternoon.
“What’s proven effective about this schedule is I get all the leisurely activities out of the way before work starts. I’ve found that I actually focus better this way,” the former CNN Philippines Life co-founder and publisher said.
In between work and rest, Raymond spends the afternoon till dinner with his family or by himself in the company of books, archival magazines (including a rare copy of Vanity Fair with Princess Di on the cover), vinyl records and “really carb-y merienda” he shares with his lola, homemade pastries captured basking in golden sunlight on a woven Halohalo sofa for his Instagram stories.
“I just read ‘A Little Life’ a few months ago.” He is, of course, referring to Hanya Yanagihara’s 700-page bildungsroman. “We’ve had the copy for years and I just put it off forever kasi ang haba. You know what’s crazy? It took me like a week! Quarantine kasi. Wala magawa.”
“Walang magawa,” however, may be an understatement for the ever-busy Raymond. Apart from being the digital publishing editor and contributing editor for WSJ publications, he is also pursuing personal projects with friends in quarantine. He is one of the founders of boutique consultancy firm Milk Man Marketing along with writer Martin Yambao and stylist MJ Benitez.
“Being part of that archipelago also means being aware of what’s happening outside your bubble, the different communities that might be having a harder time than you, and figuring out how you can help.”
When he does have time to himself, how does Raymond spend it? Here, he lists some of the things that are keeping him occupied while making his time in isolation a little lighter.
A jacket that reminds me of adventure
“I’ve always loved this safari jacket I bought from Eairth eight years ago. It was my go-to article of clothing in my early 20s (when I frequented Rocket Room and Hotdog at Aracama—an era). As I got older and started going to meetings that called for more formal clothing, I retired it from heavy rotation and it became my travel jacket.
I’ve been through a lot with this jacket and using it in quarantine, as a chore coat for my workday, it’s become a reminder of adventures past, the world out there, and the hope of future thrills.”
Rediscovering DVDs
“I’m a streaming junkie like everyone but even the bottomless libraries of Netflix, HBO Max and Criterion have their limits. A lot of classics still aren’t on streaming and a lot of times, the easiest option is still home video. Reunited with my DVD collection at home, I’m rewatching favorites by Almodovar and exploring the filmographies of Asian filmmakers like Yasujirō Ozu and Stanley Kwan.”
Life-saving cold brew
“I flew back to Manila early this year and have been riding out the pandemic with family. I’m still working remote and on New York time though—vampire hours, basically. And in the last few months, cold brew has been a real godsend.
I’ve been enjoying ordering from all the neighborhood cafes close to my heart, from The Den in Escolta to The Curator in Legaspi to Type A in Pasig. Those places have always been there for me—a lot of articles and presentations were crammed in those WiFi-powered havens—so in a time like this, I’m trying to be there for them, too. In a city like Manila, coffee shops are some of our limited options for “third places.”
A few years ago, a friend gave me this Starbucks collab with a pre-Entireworld Scott Sternberg (Band of Outsiders era). Honestly never used it until this year—I guess I was always taking my coffee to go or in cafes? It’s been a nice companion for long hours of largely solitary work.”
My first Baldwin fiction
“Prior to the pandemic, I’d only read James Baldwin’s essays. I never really had the urge to read his fiction until I encountered a Hilton Als essay on his 1956 queer classic “Giovanni’s Room.” This was kind of the perfect time to read it. Set in Paris, it was a beautifully transportive, heartbreaking read.”
“Like everyone, my screen time has definitely increased in quarantine. I try to make it a point to give my eyes a break every once in a while but I honestly have trouble keeping my eyes off my phone. It’s terrible.
Listening to vinyl records has been a great solution. A real salve from the screens. And I’ve really enjoyed doing this with my lola. We listen to Ella Fitzgerald, Basil Valdez and once, even The National’s “Boxer” over merienda.”
“Some quarantine purchases: John L. Silva’s “A Token of Our Friendship,” Marian Pastor Roces’ “Gathering: Political Writing on Art and Culture” and “Poster/ity: 50 Years of Art & Culture at the CCP,” the book that accompanied the CCP exhibit (that) the Artbooks.ph co-founder Ringo Bunoan co-curated. “Poster/ity” is a great reminder that #aesthetic existed in the Philippines before Instagram and the Internet, “A Token of Our Friendship” beautifully documents our queer history, and “Gathering: Political Writing on Art and Culture” is an essential read for anyone interested in the local cultural industries.
Nolisoli.ph: Can you share some tips on making the best of your time in isolation, whether for work, leisure, personal time, etc.?
Raymond Ang: While we’re all little islands right now, it’s good to remember that we’re part of an archipelago, a community. That can mean reconnecting with friends and taking this opportunity to strengthen our different relationships.
But being part of that archipelago also means being aware of what’s happening outside your bubble, the different communities that might be having a harder time than you, and figuring out how you can help.
Nolisoli.ph: What is something you can’t wait to do once we get out of quarantine?
Raymond Ang: Hard to think of just one thing! I’d love to get dinner in a nice, crowded restaurant, watch a movie in a packed theater, read a book in a cafe and explore the world again without fear.
Raymond’s portrait photo by JL Javier
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Although running her own business keeps her busy during the week, entrepreneur and content creator Mari Jasmine is finding ways to be more mindful as soon as she clocks out of work for the day. “This could be anything from taking a walk and leaving my phone at home, to playing the piano more often, or using my gua sha (which can be quite meditative),” she explained.
Before her workday starts, Mari takes time to enjoy a cup of tea and do journaling and meditating before organizing her workspace. To wind down, she turns off her notifications, dims the lights and uses her diffusers and essential oils.
“It also really helps when I break up my workday by leaving my desk and moving around for a while,” she added.
Beyond practicing mindfulness, here are other things helping Mari get through quarantine:
“I can’t get enough of these beautiful pieces from Munimuni that have been dyed with pigments extracted from natural sources, such as mango leaves, indigo, and talisay leaves. When I wear them out I feel like I have a piece of the Philippines with me.”
“I love browsing through Souvenir, an online store with vintage jewelry sourced from around the world. Sam Potenciano (stylist and founder of Souvenir) finds unique pieces that she curates thoughtfully and photographs herself. Their lookbooks are just as beautiful as the jewelry and are shot by Sam’s husband, Ralph Mendoza.”
“I love Bad Student’s risograph prints, this one’s designed by Felize Camille. Also offered are online workshops so keep an eye out to join the next session!”
“I’ve been playing We’re Not Really Strangers, a game that inspires meaningful connection. Great for skipping the small talk with new friends or for digging deeper with loved ones. I’ve played this game both in person and remotely, and it’s inspired some interesting conversations to say the least.”
While staying home and social distancing are still important, Mari strives to make time for friends and loved ones. “I try my best to be present from afar, whether it’s through calls, organizing activities (watching films with friends remotely or playing a card game on Facetime) and sending small gifts as a gesture to say—I’m thinking of you.”
In a post-pandemic world, one of the first things she’s looking forward to is hugging her friends.
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